Which Youtubers (or on online video sharing platform) have good astronomy/cosmology/astrophysic content
As the title said, I'm looking for good videos to learn astronomy, cosmology and astrophysics (really, anything related to space is fine, such as rocket science).
No way, Space Time isn't good. It's fantastic! Probably my favorite non-comedy channel. I genuinely understand concepts like the Uncertainty principle much better because of the show than I did from university QM.
Two of my favorites are already up. Here's some more.
Professor Carolin Crawford's Gresham stint is my all-time favorite astronomy lecture series. It's somewhat outdated, especially on the topic of Pluto, but fundamentally, it's outstanding.
Anton Petrov's channel, "What Da Math?" He breaks down science discoveries and papers, usually related to space. He does a new video every day and they're really good.
Dr Angela Collier, acollierastro, does really fun casual conversational videos on the topic that explain topics in a good approachable way. They're not going to be an efficient way to learn, but they've got a pleasant vibe
My favorites (Space Time and Anton and Dr. Becky) were already highlighted so here are more.
I wish they would bring back SciShow Space, but the occasional space or physics content on regular SciShow is still good for a general audience.
Scott Manley got known for teaching folks to play Kerbal Space Program but he's turned to great coverage of aerospace engineering and who is launching what major rocket missions this month.
Astrum is pleasant and relaxing with nice images.
Sabine Hossenfelder always has opinions on GR and QM that are somehow both spicy and super practical.
Fermilab has an official channel with good educational videos.
MinuteEarth / Minute Physics is great when you're in a hurry.
Especially the early QM videos by Sabine Hossenfelder are great. Lately she's just researching popular science news which may or may not be correct. But I like that she is at least stating her bias when she has one.
Yeah I don't always watch her non-physics coverage since I tend to get that elsewhere. But she's obviously well versed in reviewing the published literature and has a team of folks helping with that, which is more than can be said for many science journalists sadly. So even when I'm skeptical of her conclusions I'm at least confident she's not just a talking head but actually checked the core papers on the topic.
FYI there's SponsorBlock if you want to skip the NordVPN stuff. I don't begrudge any channel for needing to make a buck though.
PBS SpaceTime is outstanding, and manages to ride the line between informative and accessible very well. Some episodes especially around heavy math/quantum mechanics are impenetrable for me but all the space stuff is great, the scripts are very well written, production value is top notch.
Dr Becky provides amazing content mostly geared around recent research and theories - especially with the James Webb Space Telescope being a year old now there's some amazing insights coming out that she does a great job explaining. A bit less "pseudo lecture" than SpaceTime but still highly informative
StarTalk (Neil Degrasse Tyson) is great, but in a different way. It's less formal and very much more like a podcast than a lecture or report as the prior two are.
Sabine Hossenfelder delivers a periodic "science without the gobbledegook" show that covers all areas but generally has a focus on physics and astrophysics. She's semi-famous for not tolerating nonsense while also considering a sizeable portion of contemporary physics research to be nonsense. I think she's hilarious in a parchment-dry German kind of way, and her content goes arguably deeper than the other channels listed here in terms of subject matter - I usually leave her videos thinking about things in a different way.
SmarterEveryDay is a general science/learning channel but really piqued my interest with a recent video about talking to NASA:
The host has a background in aerospace engineering and missile test flights - so its about as close to rocket science as you can get! He knows his stuff and has a lot more practical, engineering related videos - kind of makes you think about how to operationalise the more cerebral ideas of the other channels.
Hope you enjoy some or all of the suggestions here and from other commenters
Forgot to mention Arvin Ash. Sometimes a little bit too clickbaity but overall pretty good. And he will correct himself if he got something wrong which is always a plus.
Spacerip has some entertaining space related documentaries, although probably more popular science than in depth teachings a la Richard Feynman or Michio Kaku.
I'm not sure if it's considered streaming but I absolutely love Star Talk with Neil Degrasse Tyson. The guy is amazing at teaching stuff and a comedian co host is always a plus.
What always irked me about that show was that the actual science, like how things were found out and how certain we are in that assessment, is totally glossed over. It sounds more like two potheads philosophising on their couch. It might be entertaining, but you may run away with a severe lack of understanding.